Have you added any hardware lately? Have you updated any driver just before these started? (Check
Control Panel - Windows Updates to see if any drivers were updated there about the time this started)
Main likely culprits are Video driver, other major drivers, memory, and antivirus/antispyware/security
products could be at fault as well as drive issues.

Use the troubleshooter below and refer to the next message for drivers and memory when you get to
those sections and then return back to the troubleshooter as needed.

BCCode: 50 0x00000050

Cause

The BCCode 50 usually occurs after the installation of faulty hardware or in the event of failure of installed
hardware (usually related to defective RAM, be it main memory, L2 RAM cache, or video RAM).
Another common cause is the installation of a faulty system service.
Antivirus software can also trigger this error, as can a corrupted NTFS volume.
Resolving the Problem
Resolving a faulty hardware problem: If hardware has been added to the system recently, remove it to see
if the error recurs. If existing hardware has failed, remove or replace the faulty component. You should run
hardware diagnostics supplied by the system manufacturer. For details on these procedures, see the owner's
manual for your computer.Resolving a faulty system service problem: Disable the service and confirm that this resolves the error. If so,
contact the manufacturer of the system service about a possible update. If the error occurs during system
startup, restart your computer, and press F8 at the character-mode menu that displays the operating system
choices. At the resulting Windows Advanced Options menu, choose theLast Known Good Configuration
option. This option is most effective when only one driver or service is added at a time.Resolving an antivirus software problem: Disable the program and confirm that this resolves the error. If it
does, contact the manufacturer of the program about a possible update.Resolving a corrupted NTFS volume problem: Run Chkdsk /f /r to detect and repair disk errors. You must
restart the system before the disk scan begins on a system partition. If the hard disk is SCSI, check for
problems between the SCSI controller and the disk.
Finally, check the System Log in Event Viewer for additional error messages that might help pinpoint the
device or driver that is causing the error. Disabling memory caching of the BIOS might also resolve it.BCCode: 50 0x00000050 http://www.faultwire.com/solutions-fatal_error/PAGE-FAULT-IN-NONPAGED-AREA-0x00000050-*1095.html?order=votes=======================http://www.techsupportforum.com/forums/f299/bsod-bcc-50-and-how-to-run-the-bsod-file-collection-app-683714.html

Download and install CPU-Z
and Upload screenshots of the CPU, Mainboard, Memory, and SPD tabs. In
the SPD tab, upload an image of each slot. To upload all screenshots, it
would be best to:

Run Disk Check with both boxes checked for all HDDs and with
Automatically fix file system errors checked for all SSDs. Post back
your logs for the checks after finding them using Event Viewer. In Event
Viewer, expand Windows Logs, click Application to let it load, right click Application and click Find.... Search for chkdsk or wininit to find the logs.
For any drives that do not give the message:

If you have a Marvell IDE ATA/ATAPI device, make sure the drivers
are up to date from the Intel site or Marvell site and not from your
motherboard/vendor support site.

Run Memtest86+ for at least 7-10 passes. It may take up to 22 passes
to find problems. Make sure to run it once after the system has been on
for a few hours and is warm, and then also run it again when the system
has been off for a few hours and is cold.

You should
update/replace/remove the following drivers. Any drivers that are known
to cause BSODs, please remove the software or remove the drivers and
then remove the device; steps to do so are given after the list of
outdated drivers. If you have ASACPI.sys installed, make sure it is
updated and not pre-2009; pre-2009 versions are known to cause BSODs:

To update drivers, make sure to download the drivers from
the manufacturer and not using 3rd party programs. Your drivers should
be found from your motherboard support site (ASUS, Gigabyte, MSI, etc.)
or your vendor support site (Dell,
HP, Toshiba, Sony, etc.) first. If you have devices you bought
yourself, the drivers for those devices need to be downloaded from the
manufacturer support site for those devices. If you need help, let us
know.

To remove drivers, do so by uninstalling the device or software
associated with the driver. Devices can be uninstalled through device
manager, and then the device itself should be physically removed from
the system if possible.

Remove Gigabyte Easy Tune 6. It interfaces with the hardware to
provide overclocking through software. Even without an overclock
enabled, it can still cause crashes. If you used it to overclock, reset
all values to their defaults prior to removing the software.

The following is for information purposes only.
My recommendations were given above. The drivers that follow belong to
software or devices that were not developed by Microsoft. Any drivers in red should be updated/replaced/removed. You can find links to the driver information and where to update the drivers in the section after the code box: